产品展示
  • 汽车用品 个性改装配件通用车标装饰 3D立体金属创意中国吉祥龙标
  • 轻手关门车贴请轻开轻关提示警示标识语提醒反光汽车贴纸车门标语
  • 吉利自由舰扶手箱专用 全球鹰 美日汽车中央免打孔储物盒改装配件
  • 适用于17-22款大众途昂车窗亮条途观L车身饰条门边装饰条改装配件
  • 奇瑞瑞虎3避光垫改装汽车专用防晒隔热遮光垫装饰中控仪表台配件
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

汽车配件

North Korea uses space program to disguise ballistic missile development: US intelligence

2024-05-20 15:03:04      点击:252
                                                                                                 The<strong></strong> newly completed Songhwa District in eastern Pyongyang, North Korea, April 11, is seen in this photo released by the official North Korean Central News Agency. North Korea uses its space program as a disguise to test and advance its ballistic missile capabilities, a U.S. military intelligence report said Tuesday. EPA-Yonhap
The newly completed Songhwa District in eastern Pyongyang, North Korea, April 11, is seen in this photo released by the official North Korean Central News Agency. North Korea uses its space program as a disguise to test and advance its ballistic missile capabilities, a U.S. military intelligence report said Tuesday. EPA-Yonhap

North Korea uses its space program as a disguise to test and advance its ballistic missile capabilities, a U.S. military intelligence report said Tuesday.

The report also noted the North may be trying to acquire space and weapons technologies by hacking into aerospace companies.

"North Korea has placed two satellites in orbit and has articulated further space ambitions. Its space program has also enabled testing of technology used in ballistic missiles under the guise of peaceful use of space," the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) said in a rare unclassified report, titled, "2022 Challenges to Security in Space."

"These systems provided North Korea with valuable data applicable to the development of long-range and multistage ballistic missiles," added the report.

Pyongyang fired what it claimed were space launch vehicles (SLVs) Feb. 27 and March 5, and stated that these were aimed at developing a new reconnaissance satellite.

The U.S., however, has called out those launches as tests for a new intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) system.

North Korea fired its first ICBM in over four years March 24.

Pyongyang may also be trying to obtain additional missile technology, according to the report.

"Multiple North Korean hacker groups have targeted the aerospace industries potentially including space technologies," said the report. "This activity, if left unchecked, could enable North Korea's weapons and space system development and procurement programs."

"North Korea's ballistic missiles and SLVs, such as the Unha-3 SLV, in theory could be used to target satellites in a conflict," it added. (Yonhap)

North Korea reports 89,500 new fever cases
US very much focused on human rights conditions in N. Korea: State Dept.